Ear wearing stacked silver and black hearing aids with futuristic design and textured surface in soft warm light

Danish Hearpieces Redefine Ear Tech

At a Glance

  • Lizn’s Hearpieces land in the US after a four-year reboot
  • Bulbous in-ear design weighs 4.58 g per bud-heavier than most rivals
  • Touch-only controls require users to tap the earpiece exterior
  • Why it matters: The devices merge hearing-aid tech with earbud styling, pushing the limits of wearable form factors

Lizn’s relaunch brings a radically shaped hearable to American consumers. The Danish startup, founded in 2015, abandoned its first-generation combo product in 2020 and returned this year with refined Hearpieces that ditch hardware buttons for tap gestures.

A Second-Generation Comeback

The company spent the 2010s iterating a hearing-aid-earbud hybrid, but the concept faltered. According to Lizn’s own timeline, the team shelved the effort four years ago. Persistence paid off: the revamped Hearpieces reached US retailers within the past two weeks.

Design That Grabs Attention

Each unit is self-contained yet anything but discreet. The bulbous shell sits entirely in the ear, filling the concha and hooking behind the tragus. Buyers can pick graphite, ruby red, or sand; the sand variant offers the subtlest look.

Weight adds to the presence. At 4.58 g apiece, the buds outweigh competitors such as:

  • Kingwell Melodia
  • Apple AirPods Pro 3

Four ear-tip sizes ship in the box. The pre-installed mediums seal well for most users.

Fit Challenges

Hearing aid rests in ear with graphite shell and ruby red hook gleaming under natural light

Insertion demands a careful twist so the housing nestles behind the tragus. Tight ear anatomy makes the process tricky; the reviewer had to wedge each piece firmly, leading to discomfort during longer wear.

Touch-Only Operation

Lizn omits physical buttons. Every command-volume, mode, calls-relies on tap patterns on either shell. Repeated tapping against the side of the head amplified the pressure already created by the bulky fit.

Key Takeaways

  • Lizn’s Hearpieces mark the company’s rebirth after a 2020 reset
  • The 4.58 g, bulb-shaped housing challenges conventional in-ear comfort
  • Gesture-only input keeps the exterior clean but adds user strain
  • Early adopters gain a conversation-starting design that doubles as a hearing helper

Author

  • My name is Ryan J. Thompson, and I cover weather, climate, and environmental news in Fort Worth and the surrounding region.

    Ryan J. Thompson covers transportation and infrastructure for newsoffortworth.com, reporting on how highways, transit, and major projects shape Fort Worth’s growth. A UNT journalism graduate, he’s known for investigative reporting that explains who decides, who pays, and who benefits from infrastructure plans.

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